Wydawnictwo: Haenssler
Nr katalogowy: HC 19082
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: marzec 2020
EAN: 881488190823
Nr katalogowy: HC 19082
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: marzec 2020
EAN: 881488190823
Mozart: Piano Works
Haenssler - HC 19082
Kompozytor
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Wykonawcy
Mona Asuka, piano
Mona Asuka, piano
Sonata K545 in C major (No. 16)
Sonata K310 in A minor (No. 9)
Sonata K332 in F major (No. 12)
Minuet in G major K1 (No. 1)
Rondo in A minor, K511
Sonata K310 in A minor (No. 9)
Sonata K332 in F major (No. 12)
Minuet in G major K1 (No. 1)
Rondo in A minor, K511
“The young pianist glows with enthusiasm…but then proves that for all this vigour and exuberance, she also has a keen sense of what lies between the notes and a sensitive awareness of tempo.” (WAZ newspaper).
Born in 1991, the German-Japanese pianist Mona Asuka made her debut in concert performance with the Münchner Rundfunkorchester at the age of eleven. Since then she received invitations for solo recitals and concerts with famous orchestras from around the world.
From surveying the complete works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, it can be established that of the more than 600 compositions he left for posterity, about a sixth were dedicated to the piano. In contrast to the other two masters of Viennese classical music, Haydn and Beethoven, Mozart’s music for solo piano was less of a field for formal experimentation or for expression of individual musical soliloquy. Mozart wrote his piano sonatas mostly for quite specific practical purposes, whether for performance on his travels, for musical events among a smaller circle of people, or as exer cise material for his students.
Recordings: 20.-22. September 2019 / Piding; Piano: Bechstein grand piano Model E, ca. 1928.
Born in 1991, the German-Japanese pianist Mona Asuka made her debut in concert performance with the Münchner Rundfunkorchester at the age of eleven. Since then she received invitations for solo recitals and concerts with famous orchestras from around the world.
From surveying the complete works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, it can be established that of the more than 600 compositions he left for posterity, about a sixth were dedicated to the piano. In contrast to the other two masters of Viennese classical music, Haydn and Beethoven, Mozart’s music for solo piano was less of a field for formal experimentation or for expression of individual musical soliloquy. Mozart wrote his piano sonatas mostly for quite specific practical purposes, whether for performance on his travels, for musical events among a smaller circle of people, or as exer cise material for his students.
Recordings: 20.-22. September 2019 / Piding; Piano: Bechstein grand piano Model E, ca. 1928.